Edwin L. Magnuson |
There
are undoubtedly hundreds of war heroes who hail from towns found along Highway
83.
Marine Corps Corp.
Harlan Block, one of the six portrayed on the Iwo Jima War Memorial, was from
Harlingen, Texas. Medal of Honor recipient Army Master Sgt. Jose Medoza Lopez
was from Mission, and a statue commemorating the day he single-handedly
repulsed a German infantry attack stands in Brownsville.
I
would like to take this Memorial Day week to record the story of my second
cousin Army Staff Sgt. Edwin Lloyd Magnuson from Stapleton, Nebraska, who
earned the silver star for his bravery in World War II.
Lloyd,
as he preferred to be called, grew up in the Sand Hills town, a terminus for a
Union Pacific spur line, long before the highway reached it.
He
was the son of my grandfather’s older brother, Guy.
He
enlisted in the Army at age 19 on Sept. 25, 1941, and after bootcamp was sent
to Fort Lewis, Washington, a topography and climate about as different as it
could be from the arid Sand Hills. He waited almost a year to be deployed.
He
wrote a letter home to his mother Mable Magnuson during his waning days there,
expressing his frustration. His unit was wiling away the days guarding
airplanes at a nearby Army air base to keep busy.
“I
would rather be on the front lines fighting,” he wrote. Meanwhile, he was at
risk of not going at all. He had an inflamed tendon cord and if it got any
worse, the doctors would operate on it, and discharge him. But that didn’t come
to pass. He wrote that they had recently received orders to clean out their
footlockers of all unnecessary items, and to toss everything except what they
had been issued. The time was near.
At
some point during that year, he had returned to Stapleton on leave. That was
the first memory my cousin Elaine Barner — about four years old at the time —
has of her brother. She saw him standing on the bathroom shaving. “I expect
that you’re my brother Lloyd,” she said.
“I expect that I am,” he told his baby sister.
Elaine has some pictures of what we presume is his time in Washington. One is
of his unit in what looks like a mess hall. The soldiers have big, thick cut
steaks. It’s doubtful they featured that at every meal. However, despite the
jokes made about Army chow, many from humble beginnings such as Lloyd probably never ate so well.
“I expect that I am,” he told his baby sister.
Magnuson (far left) digs into some steaks at Ft. Lewis, Wash. |
Eventually,
Private Magnuson received his wish. The letter is undated, but if he was indeed
deployed shortly after writing it, it was mailed October 1942. A month later he
would find himself in the North Africa campaign fighting German troops as the 3rd
Infantry Division swept across Morocco. We know little about his time there.
One record I have found says he specialized in radio communications. And by the
time he was 20 years old, we know he had been promoted to sergeant — remarkable
for someone that age.
Eventually,
the 3rd Infantry under the newly formed Fifth Army found itself in
the Italian campaign. First came the invasion of Sicily in July 1943. A little
more than a month later, allies landed at the toe of Italy. In September 1943,
somewhere on the Italian mainland, he earned the silver star for gallantry in
action.
His
citation reads: “On the 13th
of October, 1943, while his company was engaging
the enemy, Sergeant Magnuson
observed that the left flank of his company was endangered by several of the
enemy firing machine pistols from a ditch by the road.
Gen. Mark Clark pins the silver star on Magnuson. |
“He
worked his way toward them, taking advantage of all cover, until he had
approached to within 20 yards of the enemy, he then opened fire with his
sub-machine gun, killing three of the enemy and capturing the other four.”
Elaine
has a picture of Lt. Gen. Mark Clark pinning the silver star on Lloyd. He had
also by this time earned a Purple Heart for wounds sustained in action,
although we have no details how or where we was hurt.
Next for the Fifth Army was the beach landing at
Anzio, known as Operation Shingle. Its ultimate goal was to capture Rome, some
40 miles to the northeast. The landing took the Axis troops by surprise, but
Commanding General John P. Lucas failed to take advantage of the situation,
preferring to establish a strong beachhead as a base instead. The decision to
stay put allowed German troops to rally, and the Battle of Anzio would continue
for another month.
It
was two days after the first landing, January 24, 1944, when Lloyd was killed in
action.
We
currently don’t have any details about the circumstances of his death. Elaine
remembers reading a letter written by a fellow soldier to her mother that said
he died instantly and didn’t suffer, but she doesn’t have a copy of the letter
now.
Staff
Sgt. Edwin Lloyd Magnuson became the first from Logan County to be killed in action
in World War II. The Veterans of Foreign Wars Post #8258 in Stapleton is named
in his honor. He is buried at the Fort McPherson National Cemetery east of
North Platte.
Lloyd
was just one of 42,310 Americans who lost their lives or went missing in action
during the Fifth Army’s 20-month-long Italian campaign.
My thanks to Elaine Barner for sharing these photos and newspaper accounts of her brother.
My thanks to Elaine Barner for sharing these photos and newspaper accounts of her brother.
Stew Magnuson is the author of The Last American Highway: A Journey Through Time Down U.S. Route 83: The Dakotas, available at Amazon.com and bookstores and gift shops along Highway 83. And The Last American Highway: Nebraska Kansas Oklahoma edition.
To join the
Fans of U.S. Route 83 group on Facebook, CLICK
HERE. And check out the U.S. Route 83 Travel page at www.usroute83.com. Contact Stew Magnuson at stewmag (a) yahoo.com
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